Taxi industry inquiry


Introduction Inquiry background



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Introduction

    1. Inquiry background


On 28 March 2011, the Victorian Government established an independent inquiry into the Victorian taxi and hire car industry. Announcing the inquiry, the Victorian Premier, Ted Baillieu, identified a number of problems with the industry and stated:

It is obvious that the current industry structure and regulation has failed. It has entrenched a lack of accountability for on-the-ground taxi services by the major industry participants.1

The Premier nominated key tasks for the inquiry, including improving low levels of public confidence, providing better security and support services for drivers and safety for customers, and ensuring drivers are properly trained and knowledgeable. The Premier indicated that he expected the inquiry to address 'long-standing and deep-rooted' issues and to recommend 'sweeping reforms' to the industry.

At the same time as establishing the inquiry, the Government announced a two-stage reform process for the Victorian taxi and hire car industry. In the first stage, the Taxi Industry Inquiry would conduct a comprehensive investigation into service, safety and competition issues in the industry. In the second stage, following the completion of the inquiry, a new Taxi Services Commission will take over the role of industry regulator from the Victorian Taxi Directorate. The Commission will then operate as a statutory authority with powers to reform the industry.

    1. Scope of the inquiry


The Taxi Industry Inquiry is being conducted by the Taxi Services Commission, a new body established under the Transport Integration Act 2010.

The Commission has been given a range of powers and responsibilities to facilitate the inquiry, including powers in relation to the collection and disclosure of information, the holding of public hearings and the publication of reports. These powers and responsibilities are contained in the Transport Integration Act 2010 and the Transport (Compliance and Miscellaneous) Act 1983.2


      1. Terms of Reference


The Taxi Industry Inquiry’s Terms of Reference require the inquiry to undertake a wide ranging review of the Victorian taxi and hire car industry, focusing on core issues related to customer service, safety and the roles and accountability of industry participants. The overall aim of the inquiry is to instigate major and enduring improvements to key aspects of the industry.

Terms of Reference

The Commission will have broad scope to review the sector and its performance against the following principles:

Customer and service focus

Safety for passengers and drivers

Support for and training of drivers

Integration with other forms of public transport

An outcomes-based and accountable regulatory framework

Market design that is effective, efficient and promotes competitiveness

Sustainability, in economic, environmental and social terms.

The overall aim of the Commission is to instigate major and enduring improvements to service, safety and competition to Victoria’s commercial passenger vehicle industry.

The inquiry should be wide ranging and consider all point-to-point transport services including taxis, hire cars and other demand responsive services with a particular focus on service outcomes.

The Commission should conduct broad ranging consultation to determine the views at all levels, including consultation with the general public and expert industry and other key stakeholders.

The Commission must prepare a Final Report and make recommendations focusing in particular on the following:

The appropriateness of the structure of the taxi industry including the accountability of the range of industry participants with a particular focus on commercial incentives to participants including licence holders to improve services to passengers

Service delivery and employee conditions, in particular the working conditions, training, standards and remuneration of drivers, and how these contribute to service standards and outcomes

Competition in the sector, in particular focusing on vertical integration, anti-competitive practices and incentives for innovation

The effects of regulation, particularly relating to entry to the taxi market through capped licence numbers and to price controls and taxi fare setting arrangements, and how these impact on customer service and innovation

The performance of the Multi-Purpose Taxi Program and Wheelchair Accessible Taxis in providing service to people with disabilities and a broad range of mobility disadvantaged people

The current and potential role of taxis, hire cars and other demand responsive transport services in an integrated transport system, with a focus on the role of these services in social inclusion

Options for reform including benchmarking safety and service standards, appropriate market-based, legislative and administrative solutions, and communication technology advancements that may be harnessed, to facilitate improvements in the safety, service and environmental performance

The appropriate regulatory and service model for long term regulation and operation of the industry, focussed on service outcomes

Examine, evaluate and report on other models and new approaches in the taxi and hire car sectors both in Australia and overseas

Transitional arrangements from the current regulatory and service arrangements to the recommended model

Any other related matters.


      1. Issues leading to the inquiry


Announcing the Taxi Industry Inquiry, Premier Ted Baillieu identified the key problems with Victoria’s taxi industry as:

Low customer satisfaction

Safety and security for passengers and drivers

Insufficient support for drivers

Too many poorly-skilled drivers with inadequate knowledge

A high turnover of drivers resulting in a shortage of experienced drivers

Complex ownership and management structures

A lack of competition

Too much industry revenue not being directed to the service providers – the taxi drivers and operators.3

The Premier described the industry as ‘troubled’ and in need of ‘significant reform to drive improvements in service’.

Introducing the legislation to establish the Taxi Services Commission in June 2011, the Minister for Public Transport, Terry Mulder MP observed:

Victorians are fed up with the never-ending problems in the taxi industry and the appalling reduction in levels of service over recent years … While many taxi operators and drivers do a good job, the problems driving customer dissatisfaction are clear: the long queues for a taxi in the Melbourne CBD and other entertainment districts on a Friday or Saturday night, drivers who do not know where to go, taxis that do not turn up, drivers who will not accept a short fare, violent incidents and unsafe behaviour.

Victorians are embarrassed when a dirty taxi or a poorly trained driver gives international visitors an unfavourable first impression of Melbourne. They are angry when they hear that taxi licences cost up to half a million dollars while taxi drivers are earning less than the minimum wage.4

In May 2011, the commencement of the inquiry was accompanied by media reports of the Victorian Department of Transport (DOT) Customer Satisfaction Monitor (CSM) recording the lowest levels of satisfaction with taxi services since the survey began in 2005. Key problems identified by the CSM included difficulties in obtaining taxis off the street and at ranks, a lack of information about taxis and poor passenger experiences.

There has also been a significant increase in formal passenger complaints about taxi services lodged with the Victorian Taxi Directorate in recent years, with the number of complaints trebling between 2004 and 2010.5

These problems reflect longstanding concerns and complaints about the performance of taxi services raised through formal and informal channels by taxi users, business and tourism groups, community organisations and local councils, as well as by many industry participants. Generally, these issues have been accompanied by dissatisfaction from both within and outside the industry about aspects of the taxi market’s structure, operations and regulatory environment, and by considerable public debate about the impact of deeper structural and systemic issues on the industry’s competitiveness and performance.




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